Chapter 27: Nascent Descent (2/2)

She connected and flooded the creature’s conduits. They were titanic. After hundreds of victims, killing with yoink had been like exploding a balloon with the stream from a garden hose. Now, it was like filling a tub.

And she did.

Without thought, overwhelming power invaded the creature’s network, claiming the black and making it hers. The color sang in her core and in her mind, eager to carry out her will. It rampaged through the foreign conduits without restraint. The dire violation sent a tremor through the attacked limb. A second spell lashed out just as the target was retreating.

The creature seized the captured arm and ripped it off. It used the severed limb to intercept the second spell and ran backward, just as Marruk’s mace whistled through the air. The amputated arm turned to ash.

Then the creature was gone.

“Orrak Makthun!”

“Neriad’s cock…”

“Bordel de merde.”

“Squeeeee!”

As one man, the living visitors of the cave expressed their dismay. Farren and Viviane swore the loudest.

[Nascent Necrarch: Extremely dangerous, this creature is in the process of evolving into a Necrarch, the most powerful of all natural undead. Although weakened during the transformation, it remains a supremely dangerous existence, capable of clawing through heavy armor.]

The golden sheen around Marruk’s shield had faded. In its stead, four diagonal tracks had sliced through wood and reinforced steel alike. Only the dense structure of the door knocker had held long enough to prevent the Kark woman from having her arm shredded.

“What. In Enttikku’s hallowed name. Was that?” Marruk asked in a clipped voice. She was breathing heavily, and Viv suspected that her uncanny parry had come at the cost of stamina.

Farren took a step back and sat heavily.

“That is the apex existence of the deadlands in the making. A nascent Necrarch. I don’t think we can defeat it, despite Bob’s timely spells. Well done, by the way. I thought we were done for, for sure.”

“It was closer than I hoped. Are we going after that thing?”

//Before you continue this discussion, we may want to solve the current problem.

Three people jumped a bit, then Farren swore when he realized that Solfis was standing at their back, as if he had been there all along. He was near the entrance, slightly to the side.

“When did you get here?” Viv asked.

//At the same time as him, Your Grace.

Solfis’ yellow glare turned to the side, where there was nothing.

Absolutely nothing.

“You’d better show yourself, Irao,” Farren said.

A shape emerged from the wall. Well, not literally. Before there was a wall, and now there was a shape. Viv could scarcely believe her eyes as they processed what could only be qualified as a fucking ninja.

Really.

Black armor wrapped around a thin, lanky build. It looked like a person, if a slightly anorexic one. And just a little crooked. In fact, every aspect of the man disturbed Viv at a fundamental level. His proportions skirted the edge of human limits, and she found herself taking a step back.

[Obfuscated: your inspection skill is being blocked.]

That didn’t bode well.

Farren precluded any complaint by waving his hand.

“Not a danger, nothing will happen as long as I am not harmed. Everybody, stay calm.”

Marruk kept her shield angled towards where the undead abomination had disappeared, but it was clear that she was feeling ambivalent about the whole bullshit and her frantic eyes jumped from one deadly thing to another.

“Squee!”

Viv patted Arthur’s chest and decided to act decisively.

“Marruk, watch the tunnel. Block it with your shield.”

The Kark woman nodded and approached the opening with Viv as backup. The value of the door proved itself when it was used as an actual door. The way was blocked. The nascent Necrarch would have to ram through it and Marruk’s sturdy frame to escape. Viv made sure to stay around.

“Okay. Farren, who, what, and why?”

“Irao is here for my protection. He will only act to defend me. Won’t you Irao?”

The shape’s attention was fixed on Solfis who was not moving at all. Only Viv knew that the Golem’s reserves were very low and that even idleness was too dangerous to sustain.

The silence grew uncomfortable.

“Irao is fine, I promise. He is not… the best with people. I suggest that both him and… your… is that truly a golem?”

//I am Solfis, little man.

//You may think that you are protected by your assassin friend.

//You are wrong.

//Tricks and deceptions are of no use against me.

//TRY ME, AND DIE.

“Perhaps it would be best if the two of you waited by the sled,” Viv suggested. Now was not the time for explanations.

“Okay so yes, Irao is an assassin, but I swear on Neriad’s name that I did not intend to hurt you in any way. He is just insurance.”

Huh. It was really unambiguous as far as oaths were concerned. Viv shook her head.

“Fine, but we can talk later. For now, fall back. We won’t be long.”

“A nascent ravager is a dangerous adversary, even with your abilities, Bob.”

“I don’t intend to face it.”

“Ah, of course. Naturally, I would not expect you to assault such a foe in its very lair.”

“Ah, nah. What I mean is that I don’t intend to walk down there. Solfis, how deep would you say that thing goes?”

//From the blocked off right-hand cavern entrance, I can extrapolate enough to make the following statement.

//The nascent necrarch has dug a path that is no less than ten paces, and no more than twenty paces deep.

“Just the right size then. Marruk, cover me. And you guys fuck off.”

Viv was about to send a blight that would go through that tunnel like a laxative through a big intestine. Shit would get real.

“Can I stay and watch, please? We will behave. I swear it on Neriad.”

“Ok then. Solfis, stand down, and you? Shut the fuck up.”

Solfis returned to his more compact form and Farren stepped back to the entrance with his secret bodyguard or something in tow. It was time for Viv to violate the Geneva Convention on the use of chemical weapons and, by God, she was looking forward to it.

Strands of black mana gathered in front of her core. She could have made it appear in her hand but it made no difference and she found it fancier. The orb grew to the size of a tennis ball, both incredibly dense and weightless. She infused it with the idea of destruction. It had become easier to do, and she was tempted to add another rune than just spread. She refrained, however. Now was not the time to experiment. Instead, she charged it as much as she could. Soon, her breath hastened under the pressure of the spell. Her head tingled. It was time.

“Blight.”

Just like last time, the globe of darkness expanded into an impenetrable cloud that covered the entire tunnel. A furious hiss soon surrounded Viv as the deleterious mana scathed the walls on its way down.

Marruk voiced her worries.

“How do we know if something something dead?” she asked. Viv could not understand the words she had used, but she got the gist of it and soon, Marruk had her answer.

They heard a roar of anger, then a shriek of pain, then silence for a few seconds. The shriek resumed, and turned frantic. Finally, there was an ear-splitting, maddening trill that ended into a gurgled whisper. When silence finally descended a moment later, no one reacted.

“Should we check if it’s dead?” Farren asked in a small voice.

“It’s dead,” his companion commented drily. He had a raspy voice, as if his throat had been damaged by smoke.

Without a word, the assassin walked back to the entrance and disappeared. Solfis tracked something Viv could not see for a few moments, then his eyes dimmed.

“Wow. I had no idea someone so early on her path could unleash such devastation.”

Viv wheeled around like a dervish, her gaze now drilling through Farren’s apologetic expression.

“Ok, enough bullshit. Explanation time. Why was there an assassin on my back?”